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The Kingdom of Navarre remained in personal union with the Kingdom of France until the death of King Charles I (Charles IV of France) in 1328, and on March 13 of the same year, Don Juan Martínez de Medrano and Don Juan Corbaran de Lehet were appointed regents of the Kingdom of Navarre for 11 months (February 27, 1329) until the succession in ...
Coat of arms of the monarchs of Navarre since 1580–1700. This is a list of the kings and queens of Pamplona, later Navarre.Pamplona was the primary name of the kingdom until its union with Aragon (1076–1134).
The nobility of Navarre, skeptical of Ramiro having the necessary temperament to resist the incursions by their western neighbor, king Alfonso VII of León and Castile, who was another claimant, and perhaps chafing under the continued Aragonese hegemony, [3] initially favored a different candidate, Pedro de Atarés, a grandson of Alfonso's ...
King of Navarre r. 1284–1305: Joan I 1273–1305 Queen of Navarre r. 1274–1305: Robert II 1248–1306 Duke of Burgundy r. 1272–1306: Jeanne of Évreux 1310–1371: Charles I(IV) 1294–1328 King of France and Navarre r. 1322–1328: Margaret of Burgundy 1290–1315: Louis I (X) 1289–1316 King of France r. 1314–1316 King of Navarre r ...
His father was first cousin to King Philip VI of France, while his mother, Joan, was the only daughter of Louis X of France. Charles of Navarre was 'born of the fleur-de-lys on both sides', as he liked to point out, but he succeeded to a shrunken inheritance as far as his French lands were concerned. Charles was raised in France during ...
When Henry's son, King Francis II of France, soon died in turn, Navarre returned to the centre of politics, becoming Lieutenant-General of France and leading the army of the crown in the first of the French Wars of Religion. He died of wounds sustained during the Siege of Rouen. He was the father of King Henry IV, France's first Bourbon king.
The king of France alerted the king of Castile to the plot, and the latter promptly invaded Navarre and forced its king to sign the Treaty of Briones. [8] Eleanor played a key role in securing Charles's release in 1381 by having her brother King John I of Castile exert diplomatic pressure on France. Upon his release, Charles joined Eleanor in ...
Sancho VII (Basque: Antso VII.a; c. 1157 – 7 April 1234) [1] called the Strong (Basque: Azkarra, Spanish: el Fuerte) was King of Navarre from 1194 until his death in 1234. He was the son and heir of Sancho VI, whom he followed as the second king to hold the title of King of Navarre.